50th Anniversary

Celebrating Fifty Years of Service - Enriching Communities and Education Through the Arts

In 2010, Americans for the Arts celebrated 50 years of working to inspire and enrich communities and schools through the arts. Between 1960 and 2010, we witnessed monumental changes in the arts in America at the federal, state, and local levels all across the country. In 2010, Americans for the Arts invited you - our members and arts supporters from communities in every part of the nation - to participate in the celebration of the arts during the anniversary year. Here are a few highlights from our 50th Anniversary year.

Robert Redford served as honorary chair of the 50th Anniversary celebration, and announced his commitment at the 2009 National Arts Awards. Below are some highlights of events and programs that were held in honor of our 50th Anniversary in 2010.

The National Arts Index

The National Arts Indexwas the new annual measure of the health and vitality of arts in the United States covering the 11-year period from 1998 to 2008. The index is composed of 76 national-level indicators of arts and cultural activity showing the current condition and health of the arts. Go to ArtsBlog to hear a podcast.

The Half-Century Summit, Americans for the Arts Annual Convention

In June in Baltimore, Maryland, more than 1,000 arts professionals, elected officials, community leaders, artists, educators, students, and corporate and foundation leaders gathered for the convention. The event afforded a broad spectrum of leaders the necessary tools to make a positive impact on their communities back home as well as an opportunity to plan for the dynamic future of the arts in America.

The local, state, and national arts fields saw tremendous growth and change in 50 years. During the Field Founders session at The Half-Century Summit (pdf, 99KB), leaders discussed legendary stories and their foretelling of the future. This session culminated a year-long research contract by Maryo Gard Ewell to create a chronology of the years that led to the founding of Americans for the Arts, and its earliest years as an organization.

Why Arts Matter Video Contest

The viedo contest was created in honor of the 50th Anniversary. We asked you to celebrate the arts in America by creating a video that tells "Why the Arts Matter" to you, and you joined other people across the country who shared their inspirations, favorite art forms, and why the arts matter in their lives.

Other Commemorations of the 50th Anniversary

The Americans for the Arts Action Fund wanted your help to keep the arts in schools, improving the overall academic performance and test scores of our country's children and teaching them the creative skills they'll need to succeed in the 21st century. We asked you to be part of the largest grassroots arts advocacy movement in the country. In March 2010, we launched a new and improved website providing you with more information, tools, and opportunities to play your part and join the movement.

Arts Link, Americans for the Arts quarterly member newsletter launched a re-envisioned magazine format in the spring of 2010 featuring even more tools and examples from both Americans for the Arts and your peers in the arts field to educate, equip, and inspire you and your work to advance the arts.

National Arts and Humanities Month (NAHM) is a coast-to-coast collective celebration of culture held every October and coordinated by Americans for the Arts. From arts center open houses to mayoral proclamations to banners and media coverage, communities across the United States joined together to recognize the importance of arts and culture in our daily lives. The winners of the "Why Arts Matter" video contest were announced during the 2010 NAHM in honor of Americans for the Arts 50th Anniversary. We celebrated by partnering with emerging leaders to host Creative Conversations.

The United States House Representatives Honors and Salutes Americans for the Arts on its 50th Anniversary
On September 23, 2010 The United States House Representatives unanimously passed Resolution 1582 by voice vote: "Honoring and saluting Americans for the Arts on its 50th anniversary." Rep. Louise Slaughter (D-NY) spoke to the accomplishments of Americans for the Arts in her introduction to the Resolution:

"I thank Americans for the Arts and all their wonderful staff and all the people that have devoted their working careers to this noble effort and for their wonderful, fine achievements over the past 50 years. I am sure that the next 50 will be filled with even more accomplishments, and that we will all continue to enjoy the richness that the arts provide to each of our lives."

Happy New Year from all of us to our members, partners, and supporters of the arts! We enjoyed working with you in 2014, and we're looking forward to a engaging, creative, productive 2015 in partnership with all of you!

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Americans for the Arts serves, advances, and leads the network of organizations and individuals who cultivate, promote, sustain, and support the arts in America. Founded in 1960, Americans for the Arts is the nation's leading nonprofit organization for advancing the arts and arts education.